Hulu or Netflix may just save ‘Brooklyn Nine-Nine’

Brooklyn Nine-Nine was among the numerous shows to be canceled by Fox on Thursday, but amid the shock and outrage online there may still be hope for fans of the cult cop comedy. Just hours after news of its demise broke, Deadline is reporting that multiple networks and streaming services are interested in picking the show up for a sixth season.

Universal TV, which owns the rights to Brooklyn Nine-Nine, is reportedly receiving calls from Hulu, Netflix, NBC, and TBS about bringing the show back.

Ever since the revival of Arrested Development several years ago, fans have viewed streaming services as the saviors of beloved TV shows from cancellation hell. More often than not, it doesn’t work—at least not right away—but the success stories of The Mindy Project, Longmire, Community, and Gilmore Girls, among many others, demonstrate that it’s possible. And so, every time a beloved cult series is canceled, fans try. (We’re still crossing our fingers on Hannibal season 4!)

Brooklyn Nine-Nine fans late Thursday called for Netflix or Hulu to swoop in and save the show from its fate; even some of the show’s cast members urged fans to reach out.

With rallying cries from critics, fans, and celebrity viewers like Mark Hamill, Seth Meyers, and Lin-Manuel Miranda, it might already be working.

Hulu, which streams Brooklyn Nine-Nine, is viewed as the likeliest option. Hulu has a prior relationship with Universal TV, which also owns The Mindy Project, another show that Hulu saved from Fox’s scrap heap. Brooklyn Nine-Nine likewise has a relationship with TBS, which airs reruns of the show. And never count out Netflix, which also has a relationship with Universal TV.

It’s not often that one network or streaming service—let alone four of them—expresses interest in saving a show. But the odds that Jake Peralta and the NYPD’s 99th Precinct live to fight another day are looking good.

Michelle Jaworski is a staff writer and the resident Game of Thrones expert at the Daily Dot. She covers entertainment, geek culture, and pop culture and has brought her knowledge to conventions like Con of Thrones. She is based in New Jersey.